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The legacy of human use in Amazonian palm communities along environmental and accessibility gradients
Authors:Gabriela Zuquim  Mirkka M Jones  Otso Ovaskainen  William Trujillo  Henrik Balslev
Institution:1. Section of Ecoinformatics and Biodiversity, Department of Biology, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark;2. Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland

Institute of Biotechnology, HILIFE - Helsinki Institute for Life Science, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland;3. Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Programme, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland;4. Grupo Investigaciones territoriales para el uso y conservación de la biodiversidad, Fundación La Palmita, Centro de Investigación, Bogotá, Colombia

Abstract:

Aim

Palms are iconic and dominant elements of neotropical forests. In the Amazon region, palms have been used and managed by humans for food, material, medicine and other purposes for millennia. It is, however, debated to what extent the structure of modern palm communities reflects long-term human modification. Here, we investigate the complex interplay of ecological and societal factors that influence the distributions of both human-used and non-used palms in western Amazonia.

Location

Amazonia.

Time period

Present.

Major taxa studied

Palms (Arecaceae).

Methods

We used Bayesian hierarchical joint species distribution models to predict the distributions and environmental niche dimensions of 78 western Amazonian species, and to explore their relationships with their diversity of human uses and with specific uses (food, construction and medicine). The models were parameterized with a comprehensive set of field- and satellite-derived environmental predictors.

Results

Our results suggest that a combination of ecological and anthropogenic factors drive the present-day distributions of Amazonian palms. The modelled ecological niches of the species revealed use-related species-sorting along soil, climatic, accessibility and drainage gradients. We found peaks in the proportions of useful palms and their diversity of uses in fertile soils, close to rivers, and on floodplains. These are habitats favourable for human settlement, although they harbour naturally restricted palm species pools. We also found a negative correlation between predicted palm species richness and number of human uses across western Amazonia.

Main conclusions

Soil characteristics, accessibility, and species pool size all contribute to defining palm–human relationships. At the basin scale, the signature of human use on palm communities was predicted to be stronger in the species-poor south-west than in central-western Amazonia. Overall, we conclude that environmental conditions have influenced modern Amazonian palm distributions both directly and indirectly, by regulating human settlement patterns and natural resource use over extended time periods.
Keywords:biodiversity  human footprint  plant communities  soil  tropical forests  vegetation
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